Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
A Proposal
#1
There is, already gathered here and embodied within the pool of founding members of this forum, as well as in some of the membership already deep into research, with publications credited to their name, a significant body of talent, insight and expertise.

I think it would serve if a convocation of mind, energy, ideas and resources could be gathered that would harness that quivering mass of as-yet-compactly-aligned-and-harnessed talent, insight and expertise to brainstorm and become active in ways that filled in the gaps, furthered the work, and provided for additional outreach.

I have -- more than once -- mentioned that I'd like to have a huge dinner party involving the people here. That being nearly impossible in real time and space, due to fiscal and other constraints, I've noted "virtual conferences". Even those require significant energies and capital.

But podcasting may offer a more viable solution...

[/FONT] http://www.squidoo.com/freeandeasypodcasting[/FONT]

###

We "converse" -- often with agonizing slowness and the difficulties of incompleteness of follow-though .. in asynchronous threads. But whole fabric may be available, at least in larger swatches.

Andrew Lippmann, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Media Technology associated with MIT's Media Lab, said in 1986 that "Interaction involves mutual and simultaneous activity among people working on a common goal. The process must be mutually interruptible (like a "conversation") and therefore where you end up is an unknown."

Lawrence Halprin, the landscape architect who gave us the RSVP cycle of seed (resources), score (theme), value/feedback, and performance, says that through "the process of cyclical involvement with people, you can generate creativity, which is what really counts. Without a sense of participation, there cannot be any group creativity..... Whenever communications are discussed, there is always a lot of talk about common language. If you put people in positions in which they share an experience -- experience on a deep level -- that in itself is the most powerful form of common language I can possibly imagine."

Anne Branscomb, in "Finding One's Way in a Multimedia Society", tells us that it is not the technologies we'd use but the human brain power and the human values, brought through stages of entry, exploration, integration, commitment and fulfillment by a computer-aided but human-centered process, that enables answers to emerge.


###

[/FONT]A couple of years ago, riffing off Nancy White, I wrote that

"[/FONT]Life’s meaning, and an understanding of what needs to be done, emerges, most often, from conversation in community with people you love. It is the key to changing anything, whether it be the political or economic system, or yourself, or whether you want to save the whales, stop global warming, reform education, spark innovation or change anything else."

"I think there are ten reasons that conversations are so valuable they drive almost everything we believe, understand, and do:
  1. It’s better to know. Maybe we say and feel that we don’t want to know how bad it is, but when we say that we’re already imagining the worst. The truth is usually not that bad, and that truth often emerges from conversation.
  2. We like reassurance that what we feel and think makes sense. The fastest way to get that reassurance is to converse, to share, because from conversation come the nods of understanding, the appreciation, the sympathetic ideas, and the empathy that make what we feel and think more bearable, more sensible.
  3. It’s how we learn. We learn best by doing, by watching others, and by asking questions, and all three processes are improved through intelligent conversation. Tell me, how/why did you do that? Show me again and this time talk me through it. Now let me try, and tell me how I’m doing at each step.
  4. It’s how we decide. The best decisions are informed by ‘the wisdom of crowds’, by consultation, by talking through the options, by consensus.
  5. It’s how we resolve conflict. Conversation is how we ‘talk out’ our differences. When we discuss our respective viewpoints respectfully and openly, an appreciation of the other person’s feelings, beliefs and rationale can emerge, and the misunderstanding that usually underlies the conflict can be dissipated.
  6. It leads to intention, and hence to action. Often an event or learning will lead us to a sense of urgency to act, but not give us wisdom of what action to take. Conversation, once it has reassured us that our instinct to act is valid, can help us surface and learn some of the options to act, and hence propel us into action. And when we converse, we often state our commitment, our intention to act, and having a witness to that intention can also push us to act on it.
  7. It clarifies, in our own minds, what we care about and hence who we are. What we care about defines who we are, so when we have a conversation that helps us understand whether and to what degree we care about an issue, and why, we come to understand and know ourselves better. That makes us more useful in many ways, and in the process, probably makes us happier.
  8. With practice, it improves our social fluency, and other critical capacities and competencies. The chart below is one I co-developed with Chris Lott, and the blue circle which, in concert with our knowledge and thinking competencies enables us to be usefully expressive (artistic and improvisational, and hence socially fluent) is all about the capacity for and practice of conversation.
  9. With practice, it teaches us the critical appreciative skills of listening and attention. Every conversation is a dance, and you have to be pretty insensitive not to realize that if you always lead and dominate the conversation, soon people won’t want to dance with you any more. And of course we learn more when we pay attention, really listen to what others are saying.
  10. It opens us to new possibilities. Although often in conversation we are seeking reassurance, attention and appreciation, sometimes we will be surprised, bowled over, astonished, to hear something, or to realize something, that changes us radically, opens us to new ideas and worldviews, breaks our heart. That is the key to innovation and resilience, and good conversation can expose us and keep us open to these mind-altering, heart-breaking new possibilities."
[Image: socialfluency.jpg]


Dave Pollard's blog entry on [/FONT]the value of conversation at [/FONT]http://howtosavetheworld.ca/2010/03/23/t...versation/
"Where is the intersection between the world's deep hunger and your deep gladness?"
Reply


Messages In This Thread
A Proposal - by Ed Jewett - 25-03-2010, 06:37 PM
A Proposal - by Ed Encho - 25-03-2010, 07:44 PM
A Proposal - by Nathaniel Heidenheimer - 27-03-2010, 04:55 PM
A Proposal - by David Guyatt - 27-03-2010, 08:12 PM
A Proposal - by Carsten Wiethoff - 27-03-2010, 08:40 PM
A Proposal - by Ed Jewett - 27-03-2010, 11:45 PM
A Proposal - by Magda Hassan - 28-03-2010, 12:26 AM

Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)